Gettin' down at Yellow Quill Prairie

Gettin’ down at Yellow Quill Prairie

View out over the prairie landscape, with a light fence and sign in the lower right foreground.

Last week I started my field season by getting down on my hands and knees to collect plants and pollinators at the Yellow Quill Prairie Preserve, which is owned and managed by the Nature Conservancy of Canada. While that may not sound particularly appealing to you, it is something that I love about my job. After a long winter stuck inside, it is marvelous to spend some time out in nature appreciating the absence of city noise. When I arrived at the prairie, I was greeted by a sound that I absolutely adore: the call of a Western Meadowlark (hear it in this video). Nothing says “prairie” like a meadowlark!

 

Image: It was cool and rainy when I got to the Nature Conservancy’s Yellow Quill Prairie Preserve.

Unfortunately I was also greeted by something not so pleasant: rain and wind. Those two things in combination result in the dreaded sideways rain; you know the rain that hits you right in the face rather than landing on your hat. “Oh well,” I thought, “all I have to do on the first day is select my plots and I can do that in a bit of rain”. A little rain actually makes an interesting prairie organism come to life: star jelly (Nostoc commune). This organism looks like a tiny piece of crispy black poop when it’s dry but a greenish, gelatinous blob when wet. It’s actually a colonial cyanobacteria that lives on the prairies and adds much-needed nitrogen to the soil. I also saw a well disguised grasshopper blending in with the lichens and star jellies.

Star jellies, low to the grow in a field. Dark green, gelatinous blobs among the grass.

Star jellies (Nostoc commune) puff up and turn green when it rains.

A brown grasshopper blending in with the dried grass on the ground.

The colour pattern of this grasshopper helps it blend in with the vegetation.

The next day was my first day of pollinator surveys and though it wasn’t raining, it was so cool and windy that I saw virtually no insects. Luck was with me the next day though as I encountered perfect pollinator weather: warm, sunny, and with only a gentle breeze. Plus there were no ticks or mosquitoes! That rarely happens in Manitoba and was nice break from the last few years when I was constantly picking ticks off my pants. In addition, to seeing some nice big bumblebees, sweat bees, and a really cool beefly, there were several butterflies about as well. One of them was not so lucky as it got captured by a crab spider hiding on a groundsel (Senecio spp.) flower; a sad ending to a beautiful creature but spiders need to live too!

A butterfly capturing by a Yellow crab spider hiding on a yellow groundsel flower.

Yellow crab spiders blend in with the groundsel (Senecio sp.) flowers, making it easier for them to catch and eat pollinators like this butterfly.

A bumble bee on yellow leafy spurge.

Bumblebees (Bombus spp.) were visiting the invasive leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) plants at the preserve.

When I first started working at the Museum 12 years ago I decided to study plant-pollinator relationships in Tall-grass Prairie because it was an ecosystem that I had not visited before. Two years ago I switched to Fescue Prairie and now, to complete my understanding of prairie pollination, I need some data on Mixed Grass Prairie as well. My research will help us better understand how these prairies differ from each other and which plant species are most important for pollinators. I will be visiting Yellow Quill Prairie every two weeks until mid September and will keep you updated on the wonderful things that I see throughout the summer.

 

This research is made possible by funding from the Nature Conservancy of Canada and the Manitoba Museum Foundation.

Dr. Diana Bizecki Robson

Dr. Diana Bizecki Robson

Curator of Botany

Dr. Bizecki Robson obtained a Master’s Degree in Plant Ecology at the University of Saskatchewan studying rare plants of the mixed grass prairies. After working as an environmental consultant and sessional lecturer…
Meet Dr. Bizecki Robson